“If you can master only one skill in selling, become a master prospector. It will guarantee your future success.”
Quote from Tim Conner’s book: “Soft Sell: The New Art of Selling, Self Empowerment and Persuasion”
2. Prospecting – How Important is it?
From Tim Conner’s book
“Soft Sell: The New Art of Selling, Self
Empowerment and Persuasion”
“If you can master only one skill in selling,
become a master prospector. It will guarantee
your future success.”
3. Business Has Changed
Corporations are cutting budgets and laying
people off every day, in every industry, all over
the world.
While sales has never been "easy", it has now
become really hard. You have to talk to the right
person, say the right thing, and ask the right
questions - at just the right time - or you're dead.
4. Proper Qualifying = Improved Closing
Winners in the Profession spent over 50% of
their time “Prospecting.
Losers spend most of their time in presentations.
They are professional visitors.
5. Elements of Prospecting
1. Identification, i.e., finding customers that have:
– Need
– Desire
– Ability to pay for your products and services
– Willingness to see you
– Make or contribute to the buying decision
1. Qualification
– Determining which prospects are the “BEST” prospects to
invest:
Time
Energy
Resources in now
– Getting information to tailor presentation to needs, desires,
problems, concerns and buying style of your prospect.
6. Customer Profile = Prospect Profile
Use profile of your existing “average” customer
to develop a prospect profile.
– Take your list and develop each item into a
probing question.
– Answers to questions will move you closer to
establishing your customer as a qualified
prospect
7. Ideal Prospect
Use profile of your existing “Best” customers to
develop an ideal prospect profile.
– Create a profile template
– Use the profile template as you work toward
identifying and qualifying each potential prospect for
as close a match as possible
8. Questions to Identify Prospects
1. Do they have a basic need for the products or services you
sell?
2. Do they have the desire to buy now?
3. Is the timing right in terms of their buying cycle?
4. Can they pay for what you are selling, within your terms and
conditions?
5. What is their available cash or credit?
6. Who are the decision makers?
7. Will they and can they make a buying decision?
8. What is the decision process?
9. Do you have a favorable selling environment?
10. Who are they currently buying from?
11. Will they give you the time you need to qualify and sell them?
12. What are their attitudes, perceptions, or prejudices about your
9. ASK THE PROSPECT QUESTIONS
Most Salespeople talk to much….you learn from
listening…get the prospect to talk
10. Questions Offer Positive Benefits
Example
You visit your doctor complaining of stomach
pains. Without asking you any questions he
prescribes a medication to be taken four times a
day for 30 days.
Would you follow his advice?
11. Questions
Save you time
Keep you from talking too much
Get the prospect involved
Get and maintain prospect attention
Make your prospect think
Increase likelihood the prospect will listen to
you when it’s your turn to talk
Make you look competent and knowledgeable
12. Questions Help:
1. ..put you in driver’s seat allowing you to direct
customer in a controlled way.
2. ..you determine how cooperative your prospect will
be.
3. ..get you valuable information about client’s needs,
desires, & problems. LISTEN!
4. ..you identify client’s styles, opinions, current level of
understanding & awareness of their own needs and
your products or services.
5. ..you avoid rejection by knowing when to terminate
the presentation when you believe you are not talking
to a quality prospect.
13. Questions Build Rapport
CUSTOMER TALKS…..YOU LISTEN
One of best compliments you can pay another
human being is to be sincerely interested in what
s/he has to say…..
One suggestion is to begin by saying:
“I don’t know how my company can best serve
your needs. The best way for me to determine this
is if I can ask you a few questions. Is this OK? If
face-to-face ask: “Do you mind if I take notes?”
14. Ask Clear Questions
For example you are selling real estate and want to know
how many children the prospect has and their ages and sex.
So you ask:
Do you have any children? Yes
What I meant was, How many children do you have? Three
What I meant was how old are they? 12, 16, & 17
What sex are they, girls or boys? Two oldest are girls & youngest a boy.
Why not ask one question:
“What are the ages and sexes of your children?”
15. Question Guidelines
1. Start with broad topics
2. Keep questions free of buzzwords, jargon, and technical terms.
3. KISS…and, present one idea at a time
4. Keep questions in sequence and in proper focus
5. Keep them non-threatening and positive
6. If asking sensitive questions explain why you are asking and give
benefit to prospect for answering
7. Allow the prospect to answer, don’t force an answer
8. Maintain a consultative atmosphere
9. Phrase the questions so they are easy to answer
10. Phrase the questions from the prospect’s point of view and
psychological level.
16. Develop an example of each:
Open-ended Question:
Closed-ended Question:
Clarifying Question:
Leading Question
Assumptive Question:
17. Proven Techniques.
1. What are the questions to use that stir up buying
emotions?
2. How do you bond with anyone - no matter how
different they seem?
3. What is your strategy to maximize your selling time
on winnable deals?
4. How have you been able to be comfortable securing
commitments early?
5. How do you get prospects to pursue you and reveal
their budgets?
19. When a prospect doesn’t buy ask questions to
determine what prevented their purchase.
This can be done with:
1. After sales call
2. Telephone call
3. Letter
FOLLOW-UP ON NO-SALE
20. Maybe
If you could would you prefer a “yes”, a “no”, or a
“maybe”?
Experience says that most prospects don’t want
to reject you and their hope is you’ll simply drift
away into obscurity…..So, “maybes’ are actually
a postponed “nos”
Best advise is to avoid maybes…..